<!DOCTYPE html>
<html>

<head>
    <style>
        header {
            color: black;
            font-size: 30px;
            font-weight: 700;
        }

        nav {
            background-color: #000;
            padding: .2rem;
            text-align: center;
            position: sticky;
            top: 0;
            
        }

        ul{
            padding: 0;

        }

        li{
            color: white;
            text-transform: uppercase;
            list-style: none;
            display: inline-block;
            margin: 0 1rem;
        }

        article{
            padding: 3rem 2rem;
            text-align: center;
        }

        article:nth-child(2n){
            background-color: #fff;

        }

        article:nth-child(2n+1){
            background-color: #eee;
        }
    </style>
</head>

<body>
    <header>
        <p>LOGO</p>
    </header>
    <nav>
        <ul>
            <li>home</li>
            <li>blog</li>
            <li>article</li>
            <li>content me</li>
        </ul>
    </nav>
    <main>
        <article>
            <h2>Main Cotent Here</h2>
            <p>This is a significant change. What is happening is the absolutely positioned elements are positioning
                themselves in relation to the body element instead of their direct parent. So if the browser window
                grows, that one in the bottom left is going to stick with the browser window, not hang back inside like
                his well-behaved brother from the first image.</p>
        </article>
        <article>
            <h2>Main Cotent Here</h2>
            <p>This is a significant change. What is happening is the absolutely positioned elements are positioning
                themselves in relation to the body element instead of their direct parent. So if the browser window
                grows, that one in the bottom left is going to stick with the browser window, not hang back inside like
                his well-behaved brother from the first image.</p>
        </article>
        <article>
            <h2>Main Cotent Here</h2>
            <p>This is a significant change. What is happening is the absolutely positioned elements are positioning
                themselves in relation to the body element instead of their direct parent. So if the browser window
                grows, that one in the bottom left is going to stick with the browser window, not hang back inside like
                his well-behaved brother from the first image.</p>
        </article>
        <article>
            <h2>Main Cotent Here</h2>
            <p>This is a significant change. What is happening is the absolutely positioned elements are positioning
                themselves in relation to the body element instead of their direct parent. So if the browser window
                grows, that one in the bottom left is going to stick with the browser window, not hang back inside like
                his well-behaved brother from the first image.</p>
        </article>
        <article>
            <h2>Main Cotent Here</h2>
            <p>This is a significant change. What is happening is the absolutely positioned elements are positioning
                themselves in relation to the body element instead of their direct parent. So if the browser window
                grows, that one in the bottom left is going to stick with the browser window, not hang back inside like
                his well-behaved brother from the first image.</p>
        </article>
        <article>
            <h2>Main Cotent Here</h2>
            <p>This is a significant change. What is happening is the absolutely positioned elements are positioning
                themselves in relation to the body element instead of their direct parent. So if the browser window
                grows, that one in the bottom left is going to stick with the browser window, not hang back inside like
                his well-behaved brother from the first image.</p>
        </article>
        <article>
            <h2>Main Cotent Here</h2>
            <p>This is a significant change. What is happening is the absolutely positioned elements are positioning
                themselves in relation to the body element instead of their direct parent. So if the browser window
                grows, that one in the bottom left is going to stick with the browser window, not hang back inside like
                his well-behaved brother from the first image.</p>
        </article>
    </main>
</body>

</html>